
As America gained air superiority the drab green of the pre-1944 B-24 bombers was replaced with an unpainted natural metal finish.

In 1941 the German Luftwaffe encountered a previously unknown Russian fighter with a long slender nose clearly powered by an inline or Vee type engine.

With our reproduction of the Wright flyer (often retrospectively referred to as Flyer 1) you can proudly display the plane that started it all.

Dubbed the first modern fighter plane the Fokker E-III showed that the Germans could build formidable aircraft.

The AO1/ L19 AKA Birddog was the most popular light aircraft used for both the Korean War and Vietnamese war.

Currently on display at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington DC the Spirit of St. Louis was the plane used by Charles Lindbergh on his single-handed non-stop trans-Atlantic flight in 1927.

The PBM Mariner was an important aircraft performing anti-submarine patrols throughout the Atlantic and the South Pacific.

The C-119 was a twin engine twin boom twin tail transport designed to carry cargo personnel and supplies.

This plane made history as the first official presidential aircraft (Air Force One) and was nicknamed the Sacred Cow when it became the personal aircraft of President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

The T-6 was one of the most important aircraft designs of all time and is universally recognized.